Much of the existing literature shows that factor mobility across industries has important political economic implications but that it is exogenous to the political process. This article argues that labor’s mobility across industries can be endogenous to changes of power relations due to partisan reasons. Based on a general equilibrium model, the prediction is that, when unions are decentralized, governments led by left-wing parties seek and obtain higher labor mobility than do governments led by rightist parties. However, as unions become more centralized, this distinction becomes less clear-cut. Time series cross-sectional analyses of OECD countries from 1960 to 1999 support this prediction and the endogenous labor mobility hypothesis
Increases in wage inequality and atypical employment have occurred across post-industrial economies ...
The dissertation examines how political parties, unimpeded by the set of factors (namely, rational e...
ObjectivesThis article aims to find country-level factors that explain the rise of populist parties ...
Much of the existing literature shows that factor mobility across industries has important political...
In recent decades, there has been a gradual decline in working class organizations, including social...
The growing research on post-industrial labor market inequality bears a strong - yet mostly misunder...
This article, using unbalanced panel data on 16 affluent OECD countries, tests the effects of divers...
This article reconsiders the argument that as labor immigration policy opens, it must also become mo...
In this paper, we deal with endogenous labor movements - internal and international labor movements ...
This article presents fresh empirical data showing that policy alignment between center-left governm...
Contains fulltext : 29263.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Job mobility i...
Firms’ increasing possibilities to offshore jobs to other countries have created new risks as well a...
Political parties competing in elections for the power to set public policy face the problem of maki...
Why do left parties lose vote shares in times of economic crisis and hardship? Why do right-wing gov...
Labor market reforms are critical for economic growth. Yet, they are politically contentious and gov...
Increases in wage inequality and atypical employment have occurred across post-industrial economies ...
The dissertation examines how political parties, unimpeded by the set of factors (namely, rational e...
ObjectivesThis article aims to find country-level factors that explain the rise of populist parties ...
Much of the existing literature shows that factor mobility across industries has important political...
In recent decades, there has been a gradual decline in working class organizations, including social...
The growing research on post-industrial labor market inequality bears a strong - yet mostly misunder...
This article, using unbalanced panel data on 16 affluent OECD countries, tests the effects of divers...
This article reconsiders the argument that as labor immigration policy opens, it must also become mo...
In this paper, we deal with endogenous labor movements - internal and international labor movements ...
This article presents fresh empirical data showing that policy alignment between center-left governm...
Contains fulltext : 29263.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Job mobility i...
Firms’ increasing possibilities to offshore jobs to other countries have created new risks as well a...
Political parties competing in elections for the power to set public policy face the problem of maki...
Why do left parties lose vote shares in times of economic crisis and hardship? Why do right-wing gov...
Labor market reforms are critical for economic growth. Yet, they are politically contentious and gov...
Increases in wage inequality and atypical employment have occurred across post-industrial economies ...
The dissertation examines how political parties, unimpeded by the set of factors (namely, rational e...
ObjectivesThis article aims to find country-level factors that explain the rise of populist parties ...